Sentence Diagramming: Beginning is geared for grades 3-12. I’ve primarily been using it with a 5th grader and a 3rd grader. Personally I think this could also work with some 2nd graders as well.

Learning grammar rules truly doesn’t have to be a fight when you use this curriculum. I have a few kids who don’t like grammar. Language arts is a struggle for them. They love to read though! While I’m grateful for their love of reading, I needed to make them see that sentence diagramming was useful too. Not only is it useful, but it’s necessary. It’s a hard truth to sell to the kids though when you don’t have a curriculum they enjoy and want to use.

About the Curriculum

When you think of sentence diagramming I’m sure some are filled with dread. I’m not one of those people! I happen to be the weird kind of person who gets happy. For me, this was an easy part of school that I look back on with fondness. It might not have been the most thing I did, but it wasn’t hard. Teaching this to my children, however, has proven more difficult. This is where Sentence Diagramming: Beginning from The Critical Thinking Co. ™ comes in.

This paperback lesson book contains 12 lessons. You work through one lesson per week. It’s geared for grades 3-12+, but with all curriculum this can be adjusted and such to fit your needs. Answers are in the back of the book and there is a review as well. The pages for the lessons are perforated so that you can tear out those answers if you have a child who likes to peek.

Lessons covered in this curriculum are: simple subject, main verb, direct object, adjectives, adverbs modifying verbs, predicate nouns, prepositional phrases(adjectival), prepositional phrases(adverbial), compound subjects, compound predicates, compound direct objects, and compound predicate adjectives and nouns. Each of these has their own lesson except for simple subject and main verb which go together for the first lesson.

What We Thought

When you’re the teacher you have to look for your student input. Kids in schools don’t seem(in my personal opinion) to get as much input into their lessons as kids who are homeschooled. My children give this more stars than any other their other grammar books which is good! I can’t say they love it though. I love it for teaching them as it’s set up in a way that doesn’t require me to be pulling my hair out.

Let’s talk lesson 1. It’s simple. The kids simply are fixing sentences. It might be that the verb and noun are switched or maybe they didn’t capitalize or use punctuation correctly. Students fix those errors. Then they have to write and diagram their own simple sentences. Little more complicated but not that hard. . . yet.

Each lesson adds more to what they’ve learned. So, you really want to make sure they have grasped the content taught before they move on or they’re not going to be able to understand the new concept. It really gets moving when you get to lesson 7 where you’ve got lines going all over the place! Lesson 7 talks about Prepositional phrases(adjectival). This one required more help from me. I had to do several more sample sentences before my children really grasped the concept enough to do this on their own.

How We Used It

We did two lessons the first week since they were simpler. After that it was easier to go back to the one lesson per week. Each lesson is meant to take a week if you follow the guidelines. I think that’s fairly accurate for the time you’ll need to master each concept.

A tip. Have a notebook for each child using this so that they have extra pages. There will be erasing. We decided to work out of a notebook so we didn’t have to erase and had room to show and work through the whys.

Learn More

Make sure to check out the main blog post on the Homeschool Review Crew blog to see what all the other reviewers thought of this program and the many others that we were offered for review. You can also find the company on facebook, google +, and pinterest.

Post navigation

Navigation

About

Welcome to my blog. I'm a stay at home mom of 10. I'm also a home-school mom who enjoys teaching her children and watching them learn. I love to cook and bake for my family. We are a gluten free/lactose free/soy free family so sometimes cooking can be a challenge.

Deborah and Co.

Followers

Categories

Archives

Meta

Disclosure

DISCLOSURE
THIS POLICY IS VALID FROM 24 JANUARY 2012 THIS BLOG IS A PERSONAL BLOG WRITTEN AND EDITED BY ME. FOR QUESTIONS ABOUT THIS BLOG, PLEASE CONTACT ERIN SLOCUM FORHIMANDMYFAMILY@GMAIL.COM . THIS BLOG IS WILLING TO ACCEPT ANY FORM OF CASH ADVERTISING, SPONSORSHIP, OR PAID TOPIC INSERTIONS. HOWEVER, WE WILL AND DO ACCEPT AND KEEP FREE PRODUCTS, SERVICES, TRAVEL, EVENT TICKETS, AND OTHER FORMS OF COMPENSATION FROM COMPANIES AND
ORGANIZATIONS.THE COMPENSATION RECEIVED WILL NEVER INFLUENCE THE CONTENT, TOPICS OR POSTS MADE IN THIS BLOG. ALL REVIEWS AND OPINIONS ARE THOSE OF THIS OWNER(S) AND SHOULD BE KNOWN AS SUCH. ALL ADVERTISING IS IN THE FORM OF ADVERTISEMENTS GENERATED BY A THIRD PARTY AD NETWORK. THOSE ADVERTISEMENTS WILL
BE IDENTIFIED AS PAID ADVERTISEMENTS. THE OWNER(S) OF THIS BLOG IS COMPENSATED TO PROVIDE OPINION ON PRODUCTS, SERVICES, WEBSITES AND VARIOUS OTHER TOPICS. EVEN THOUGH THE OWNER(S) OF THIS BLOG RECEIVES COMPENSATION FOR OUR POSTS OR ADVERTISEMENTS, WE ALWAYS GIVE OUR HONEST OPINIONS, FINDINGS, BELIEFS, OR EXPERIENCES ON THOSE TOPICS OR PRODUCTS. THE VIEWS AND OPINIONS EXPRESSED ON THIS BLOG ARE PURELY THE BLOGGERS' OWN. ANY PRODUCT CLAIM, STATISTIC, QUOTE OR OTHER REPRESENTATION ABOUT A PRODUCT OR SERVICE SHOULD BE VERIFIED WITH THE MANUFACTURER, PROVIDER OR PARTY IN QUESTION.THIS BLOG DOES NOT CONTAIN ANY CONTENT WHICH MIGHT PRESENT A CONFLICT OF INTEREST. IF THIS BLOG EVER DOES CONTAIN CONTENT THAT MIGHT BECOME A CONFLICT OF INTEREST IT WILL BE IDENTIFIED
SO THAT ALL ARE AWARE OF IT.TO GET YOUR OWN POLICY, GO TO HTTP://WWW.DISCLOSUREPOLICY.ORG/